Case Studies

Social

Starting with road safety in China

China Automobile Association (CAA) is China’s oldest and largest motoring club in China. It was set up in 1995 in Beijing, and became a wholly-owned company of IAG in December 2003.

Helping motorists and reducing risk on China’s roads are central tenets of CAA’s purpose. More than 100,000 people die in road accidents in China every year.

“ Car ownership is a very new phenomenon in China,” says Kevin Fong, CEO of CAA. “Most car owners are novice drivers who simply have not grown up with a car as a regular part of their lives. This means that there is a far less developed sense of safe driving behaviours and habits.  For example, some drivers in China think that if their car has an airbag, they don’t have to wear a seatbelt.”

“Our challenge is to start right from the beginning to inform and educate Chinese car owners about the basics of road safety: wearing seatbelts, the benefits and dangers or airbags, the dangers of speeding and drink driving.”

In 2004/05, CAA launched the first phase of its Road Safety Partnership with Tsinghua University’s Automotive Crash Lab (ACL). The Road Safety Program involved five major road-safety research and media events covering safer car colours, seatbelts and airbags, speeding, child safety and drink driving.

The Beijing Traffic Management Bureau was so impressed with the campaign that it is going to partner with CAA in phase two of the program this year.

“Our partnership with Tsinghua University has been a tremendous success and a real rallying point for CAA staff,” says Kevin. “It’s gratifying and exciting to know that our campaign has reached millions of Chinese motorists through the national media coverage we have received.  But it’s not just about high profile campaigns.  We try to make sure that our patrol and towing staff give our customers and members a safety tip every time they finish a job.  We try to integrate the safety message day to day.”

CAA is also partnering with Tsinghua University to introduce the NCAP program to China. NCAP programs use a 5-star rating system to give consumers more information about the safety performance of new cars. The programs have resulted in road safety benefits in other parts of the world, such as Australia, Europe, Japan and the US.

“ As our core business is helping China’s motorists when they are in trouble, improving road safety is really about protecting our members and customers.  It also gives us a platform for a very meaningful and important dialogue with government,” says Kevin.


Case Studies


Social <previous | next>

Loading ...


Environmental <previous | next>

Loading ...


Economic <previous | next>

Loading ...


Customer focus makes the Western Australian call centre a winner

Sandy Taseff, Assistant Call Centre Manager at the WA call centre, loves her job.
More

Developing the next generation at CGU

In the CGU business, the war for talent is particularly intense.
More

Finding the right balance

Heather Smith is returning phone calls in the carers' room.
More

First to arrive, last to leave

On 20 March, 2006, Cyclone Larry, a category four cyclone, hit North Queensland, devastating the town of Innisfail and surrounding communities.
More

The way forward with smash repairers

In 2005/06 we saw our relationship with the NSW Preferred Smash Repair network come under pressure following the introduction of Care & Repair, a motor repair system that we have been operating successfully in other Australian states for some years.
More

Inviting customers to have their say

In 2005, the CGU Workers' Compensation business did something unconventional.
They talked to their customers ... and they listened.
More

Starting with road safety in China

China Automobile Association (CAA) is China's oldest and largest motoring club in China.
More

Farmers have risk on their radar

Following the success of the Risk Radar for smash repairers- which won the United Nations Association Triple-Bottom Line Award in 2005- this year CGU launched a Risk Radar for farms.
More

Helping victims of crime and trauma

IAG NZ's partnership with Victim Support has special meaning for staff member Bev Orchard - she's recently joined the organisation as a volunteer.
More

Helping the community one kid at a time

The team at the NRMA Insurance Shellharbour branch on the south coast of NSW wanted to make a difference in their local community.
More

Sustaining Thailand’s forests

Nopparat Saiboongerd is more accustomed to generating finance reports than saplings, but that all changed when she decided to participate in the NZI Thailand volunteer program.
More

Helping to reduce greenhouse gases

IAG NZ is a key sponsor of WWF-New Zealand.
More

Helping our customers control the weather

Climate is core business at IAG. Nineteen of the 20 largest insurance events in Australia’s history have been weather-related.
More

Efficiency through collaboration

Tim Considine, Director of Melbourne-based insurance brokerage Countryside Tolstrup, was worried about the amount of incoming mail.
More

Helping our customers stay safe

We're here to pay our customers' claims. We're also here to help reduce the chance of claims happening at all, which is where Chambodin Boonyinthu comes into the picture.
More

Investing in the future

Asset Management is a crucial part of IAG's business.
More

IAG New Zealand welcomed on campus

Every year Georgiana Gray slips on her casual clothes and heads to university campuses to promote IAG New Zealand, which distributes products under the State and NZI brands.
More

The less pain, the more everyone gains

It is estimated that one in five Australians suffer from persistent pain, and the lives of a third (more than one million) of these people suffer substantial interference to their lives.
More

Leading the way on research

The team at IAG's Research Centre fires a gun for a living - a hail gun.
More

Sustainability at work: beyond IAG

Sustainability not only makes good business sense, it can often be a competitive advantage.
More

Safer homes are better for everyone

The Crikey Creek Environmental Estate in Quirindi is without doubt the most comprehensive, environmentally sustainable residential development ever undertaken in Australia.
More

Getting a jump start into the smash repair industry

From the moment Laura Sikorski passed her driving test as a teenager, she was obsessed with cars.
More